For motorists who drive past the University of
Houston’s Energy Research Park along the Gulf Freeway, the one
building they catch a glimpse of is Building 1.

With its sharp lines and angles and brick exterior, the
architectural design of the facility, which sits in front of the
74-acre complex, harkens back to the early 1950s, when it was
originally built by Schlumberger.

While the look of the outside of the building looks relatively
the same, the interior has undergone a remarkable renovation
over the past year. The 55,000-square-foot facility was
transformed, yet through it all still maintains a nostalgic feel
in some places, most noticeably the front foyer area. The
building also received all new windows and a new roof.

In August, the massive renovation project was completed,
allowing various UH departments – including Real Estate,
University Advancement, Financial Reporting and Finance – to
move in. In addition, Transwestern, the property manager for ERP,
moved its staff to Building 1.

“Not everybody has moved in yet. But 100 percent of the building
is spoken for,” said Sean York, UH Real Estate Services
director.

“We are very pleased with the new space,” said UH Controller
Mike Glisson. “It is a nice work environment.”
David Ellis, executive director of Financial Reporting, said the
early-1950s architectural design gives the building a more
enjoyable atmosphere in which to work.

“The architecture of that period included a lot of glass windows
between the hallways and the rooms, which gives it a much
brighter, more cheerful appearance inside,” said Ellis, whose
department with its 11 staff members moved into the building in
August after having been located in Building 2 since 1997.

Building 1 is one of 15 comprising the ERP, which was purchased
by the university for $27 million in 2009. The complex was built
in 1953 by Schlumberger, an oilfield services company that had
moved its company headquarters to Houston 13 years earlier. By
1993, the company had moved most of its Houston operations to a
new site in Sugar Land.

After Schlumberger moved out, the complex was eventually sold.
UH began leasing space there until purchasing it three years ago
with a bold vision to transform it into a hub of energy research
and education, in which students and faculty share space with
private sector partners.

Building 1 is not the first one in ERP to be overhauled.

Prior to UH purchasing the park, the Texas Diesel Testing and
Research Center in Building 14 was the first to be renovated.
That was followed by work on the Conoco Phillips Petroleum and
Engineering Building, which was opened in January 2011. This
past April, a renovation project was completed at Building 4.

Earlier this fall, extensive renovations were completed on
buildings 14B and 15, which will house the Superconducting Pilot
Facility and Energy Device Fabrication Lab. They will become a
focal point for the research and commercialization efforts at
ERP and a catalyst for future manufacturing incubator activity
centered around energy device fabrication and manufacturing.